Despite possessing immense wealth that provides insulation ('F You money'), many business leaders avoid criticizing the administration. They fear becoming a target, a risk that ordinary citizens like activist Renee Good take while billionaires do not.
Extreme wealth creates a dangerous societal rift not just through inequality, but by allowing the ultra-rich to opt out of public systems. They have their own concierge healthcare, private transportation, and elite schools, making them immune to and ignorant of the struggles faced by the other 99.9%, which fuels populist anger.
Just as the prevalence of billionaires provided a 'heat shield' for millionaires by making them seem less extreme, the emergence of trillionaires will make the billionaire class a less potent target for political and social outrage. Public perception of wealth is relative, not absolute.
As the first trillionaires emerge, they will absorb the public and political scrutiny currently aimed at billionaires. This dynamic will effectively normalize billionaire status, much like the rise of billionaires made millionaires seem more commonplace and less of a target for criticism over wealth inequality.
While some creators debate the brand risk of hosting politicians, Ananiya Williams highlights a graver concern: physical safety. Confronting a figure like Donald Trump would make her, a Black trans woman, a direct target for violent extremists, a risk not equally shared by other creators.
Top tech leaders are aligning with the Trump administration not out of ideological conviction, but from a mix of FOMO and fear. In a transactional and unpredictable political climate, sticking together is a short-term strategy to avoid being individually targeted or losing a competitive edge.
Reflecting on his own experiences, Elon Musk advises business leaders to stay out of politics. He concludes that engaging in the political arena is a 'blood sport' where opponents 'go for the jugular,' and that his conclusion is to do less of it.
Don't expect corporate America to be a bulwark for democracy. The vast and growing wealth gap creates an overwhelming incentive for CEOs to align with authoritarians who offer a direct path to personal enrichment through cronyism, overriding any commitment to democratic principles.
Billionaire CEOs face a no-win situation where publicly opposing a wealth tax invites attacks from employees, shareholders, and media. The rational response is to remain silent while privately planning a move to a more favorable tax jurisdiction like Austin or Miami.
Through capital and connections, the top 1% can navigate the legal and political systems to their advantage—from securing bailouts to obtaining pardons. This creates a two-tiered system of justice where the law binds the 99% but does not equally protect them.
Political allies often remain silent critics until a leader's power begins to wane. The recent increase in Republicans publicly questioning Trump's economic grasp demonstrates this principle. This belated courage is more about political survival and opportunism than genuine conviction, emerging only after the personal risk has subsided.